Joan Elizabeth Hannaford 1a 2a 3a 2b 4 5

Birth Name Joan Elizabeth Hannaford
Call Name Elizabeth
Birth Name Elizabeth Joan Hannaford 4 5
Gender female
Age at Death about 72 years

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father William Hannafordabout 1797about December 1838
Mother Susanna Elliott9 January 17917 April 1861
    Sister     Mary Ann Elliott Hannaford about 1820 1820
    Brother     Richard Elliott Hannaford about 1821 22 July 1878
    Brother     George Williams Hannaford about 1822 1903
    Brother     William Hannaford about 1825 March 1869
         Joan Elizabeth Hannaford about 1828 1900
    Brother     Frederick Hannaford about 1829 17 March 1898
    Brother     John Elliott Hannaford about 1833 about November 1900

Families

Family of Robert George Green Townsend and Joan Elizabeth Hannaford

Married Husband Robert George Green Townsend ( * 1827 + 1893 )
   
Event Date Place Description Sources
Marriage 1850 Talunga, South Australia, Australia Book 10 Page 21 2a
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Samuel Townsend18531853
Mary Eliza Townsend18551908
Elizabeth Joan Townsend18641867
Robert George Townsend18681948

Attributes

Type Value Notes Sources
WikiTree Hannaford-622
 

Source References

  1. findmypast.co.uk / Devon FHS: Parish Registers - Devon
      • Date: 11 May 1828
      • Page: Baptism - Joan Elisabeth Hannaford (Rattery)
  2. Genealogy SA: South Australia BDM Indexes
      • Date: 1850
      • Page: Marriage - Robert George Green Townsend / Elizabeth Hannaford (10/21)
      • Date: 1900
      • Page: Death - Elizabeth Joan Townsend (273/112)
  3. Wikipedia
      • Page: Susannah Hannaford
  4. Ronda Hannaford: Susannah Hannaford and Her Family
      • Page: Page 8
      • Page: Page 27
      • Page: Page 15
      • Page: Page 17
  5. Alan Phillips: Family Tree of William & Susannah Hannaford 1790 - 1990
  6. The Australian Women's Weekly
      • Date: 4 May 1946
      • Page: Page 21
      • Citation:

        Racing to send apple cargoes off to England

        Families are working long hours to pick and pack fruit

        By Freda Young

        Among the apple orchardists all over Australia who are working round the clock to send off bumper cargoes to England are men and women for whom the rich harvest has a sentimental significance.

        They are descendants of the early English settlers who planted the first apple trees in South Australia on the slopes of the Adelaide Hills winding down into valleys, ideal apple country.

        All growers are sharing the satisfaction of getting off 375,000 cases of apples this month to fruit-hungry England.

        They are working at terrific pressure to get the fruit picked before it is weather-spoilt, and for the majority of them and their families this has meant a seven day and night working week for a long time.

        During recent weeks the growers received a bitter disappointment when they were told that owing to shipping shortages the original order of a million and a quarter cases could not be sent.

        The situation improved when, thanks to Argentine fruit boats becoming available, it was found that a quarter of the order could be sent.

        Extra apples are going off to England in dried and "solid pack" (a species of jellied canning), for which a huge consignment is being processed.

        About 100,000 cases are also outward bound from South Australia by Swedish freighters for Sweden.

        Still more will be sent off to troops in Japan and the Islands and even local markets are benefitting.

        In the lovely Adelaide Hills, where flourish some of the most beautiful orchards in Australia, I found the Elliott Hannaford family, of Mount Bera, Cudlee Creek, busy picking export apples.

        Included in their quota are apples from trees planted by their forebears more than 100 years ago.

        Back in 1840 Susannah Hannaford, a courageous widow with several sons and a daughter, came from Totnes in Devon and built a home, Mount Bera.

        She planted Cleopatras and Stone Pippins, many of which, proud monarchs of the orchard, are still in full bearing, and it is from these that her great-grandson, Elliott Hannaford, has, for sweet sentiment's sake, sent specimens "Home".

        There is a truly English air about most fruit gardens in the Adelaide Hills. They are encircled by hedges and leafy lanes, often overhung with English trees.

        No wonder orchardists have thrilled to the sound of "Apples for England."

        Elliott Hannaford is proud of his early pioneer connections.

        His home is the one built by Susannah and her sons, and it is almost in its original state.

        In the orchard there is a sprinkling of stately English trees, and walnut trees abound.

        Opal glass portraits of Frederick Hannaford (Elliott's grandfather) and his wife smile from the walls of the sitting-room at Mount Bera, framed in walnut wood grown on the property.

        The export of apples from Mount Bera began in Frederick's days, when he sent the first consignment of South Australian apples ever to go to England.

        They were wrapped in newspaper, packed in second-hand kerosene-cases, bound with second-hand hoop-iron, and despatched as ordinary cargo, and brought 27/- a case at Covent Garden!

        The orchard has moved with the times and Elliott is something of a pioneer himself.

        He was the first man in South Australia to put in an overhead system of pipes for spraying. About ten thousand gallons are sprayed about seven times a year.

        For three years during the war Elliott did all the spraying himself.

        There was a good deal of speculation among neighboring orchardists over the revolutionary spraying plant, but it was successful, and much hard work has been eliminated.

        The Reddens are another pioneer orchardist family.

        John Redden settled in the same Hills district with his wife and children, and many of his descendants have large fruit holdings.

        His son, Fred Redden, has a fruit property at Prairie. Up the winding Hills road is Fred's nephew, Leslie Redden.

        Leslie Redden's sister, Mrs. S. J. Hurst, of neighboring Paracombe married into another pioneer family. Her husband was the youngest of eight sons of the original Hurst settler.

        Growing and picking apples is not the whole of the apple story.

        Many orchardists have grouped together and established co-operative stores and packing sheds.

        The famous Hannaford family are in on this end of the business also, and managing the Cudlee Creek Co-operative Packing Society is Susannah's great-great-grandson, Bill Hannaford, nephew of Elliott.

        Bill was connected with the co-operative society for a number of years before he enlisted. He served five years at the war, two and a half of which were spent in England where he was a sergeant in the R.A.A.F. stores.

        South Australian history is founded on such families as the Hannafords and the Reddens.

        [Photo captions:]
        Ex-R.A.A.F sergeant Bill Hannaford carries a case of Cleopatras ready for wrapping and despatch to England

        Lovely panorama shows part of Mount Bera, in the Adelaide Hills, where there are some of the most flourishing apple orchards in the Commonwealth

        Pretty apple-picker is Peggy Hannaford, who with the rest of her family shares the seasonal job of picking

        Hannaford family at work on their orchard, Mount Bera, S.A. Mrs. Hannaford and Clair and Peggy are seen at left. Mr. Hannaford and his son John inspect apples. Apple tree in foreground is 100 years old.

        Smart packers at work at Cudlee Creek, S.A. (From left) Harold Nobes, Daphne Wilson, and Len Nobes sealing cases of apples

  7. The Chronicle (Adelaide)
      • Date: 8 October 1898
      • Page: Page 18
      • Citation:

        A GOLDEN WEDDING.

        Gumeracha, October 3

        On Thursday, September 29, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Hannaford, of Hatchland, near Gumeracha, celebrated their golden wedding. It is nearly 52 years since they were married, but not till last week had it been convenient for the family to assemble for the purpose of celebrating the event. There were present all the sons, five of whom reside in the colony and one in Queensland, and their wives, and the only daughter now living, Mrs. R. Rowe, and her husband from Victoria, also 34 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. A photographer from Adelaide took several views of the party. Mr. and Mrs. Hannaford are colonists of 58 years, having arrived here in 1840, Mr. (afterwards Sir R R.) Torrens, the author of the Real Property Act, being a shipmate of theirs. Fifty years of their life has been spent where they now reside. Mr. Hannaford and another gentleman built the first wheat stack in the colony, and he was in charge of the first mob of cattle depastured on the shores of the lakes. It needed real courage to undertake such a charge, for he and his brother were camped there alone, no other white man being within 20 miles, and surrounded by a numerous and powerful tribe of natives who had previously murdered the whole crew of a steamboat that had been wrecked at the Murray mouth. Mr. Hannaford was the first grower of winter apples in quantities in this locality. Mr. and Mrs. Hannaford, although several years past the allotted span of life, are still vigorous and hearty, and they are enjoying the fruits of a well-spent life.